Paris Peace Accords 23 Oct. 1991

Saturday, May 20, 2017

“Vietnamese
state involvement in multimillion-dollar transnational organized timber crime
simply cannot be accepted by the international community and absolutely must
not be ignored by the EU,”states Wadley.

A new
in-depth report from the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) shows that
Vietnamese officials, companies and private individuals are smuggling enormous
amounts of illegally logged timber from protected areas of Cambodia into
Vietnam.

The report,Repeat Offender: Vietnam’s persistent trade in illegal timberprovides eye-opening details gleaned from months of undercover investigations in Cambodia and Vietnam by EIA investigators. The EIA alleges that Vietnamese government officials are reaping huge financial benefits by facilitating large-scale logging in eastern Cambodia.

Jago Wadley, senior forests campaigner at EIA, described the situation in the starkest of terms.

Wadley stated in a press release, which accompanied the report. “Vietnam must address this weak approach to any agreement with the EU to combat illegal logging and the associated trade.”

Vietnamese representatives will meet in Brussels this month to finalize aForest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade (FLEGT)agreement with the EU. On paper the agreement would ensure that all timber exported to the EU from Vietnam has legal, verifiable origins.

However, the EIA found in their investigation, which they conducted from November 2016 to March 2017, that Vietnamese government officials and security force personnel are major customers for illegally logged Cambodian timber. They are banking millions of dollars in illegal cash bribes, kickbacks, and fees from timber smugglers, while hundreds of thousands of cubic meters of logs are pilfered from Cambodian national parks.

During the investigation period, unprecedented illegal logging was uncovered in Cambodia’s Virachey and Ou Ya Dev national parks, as well as Lumphat Wildlife Sanctuary. These areas are located in Cambodia’s Ratanakiri province. All of the logs were being moved into Vietnam.

Pointless regulations

The timber smuggling from Cambodia to Vietnam is taking place despite a blanket ban the Cambodian government placed on log exports to Vietnam early last year.

Corrupt officials on both sides of the border have rendered this ban toothless. The EIA found that Cambodian officials are taking payments from neighboring traders, while Vietnamese authorities have created quotas to give the logs legal status within the country while incentivizing devastating logging.

It is estimated that roughly 300,000 cubic meters of logs have been smuggled from Cambodia and legalized in Vietnam through these quotas since last November, with kickbacks possibly reaching over US$13 million.

While these profits go to local officials directly involved with the illicit trade, the central government has also benefited by taxing these imports, effectively sanctioning illegal activity, the report alleges.

The massive theft of Cambodia’s forests has largely been directed from Gia Lai province in Vietnam’s rugged Central Highlands.

In late 2016, the provincial People’s Committee permitted the importation of 300,000 cubic meters of logs through five designated border crossings, in addition to divvying the amount among 16 local companies.

Piles of rosewood litter the ground in Dong Ky, Vietnam late last year. Photo: Michael Tatarski

According to this regulation, the entire number of logs must be brought across the border before May 30.

First-hand observations by the EIA reported seven major storage depots on the Vietnamese side of the border where logs were brought after exiting Cambodia.

These depots appeared in late 2016, along with roads leading to the logging sites.

After clearing customs, the logs were taken to factories in Gia Lai and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam’s commercial capital, as well as to buyers in Quy Nhon, a port on the south-central coast.

Other loopholes

Meanwhile, Vietnam is also removing large amounts of Siamese rosewood from Laos, despite a largely effective ban put in place by the Laotian government. During a visit to Dong Ky, a wood processing village outside of Hanoi, EIA investigators were offered 1,000 tons of such timber per month.

Reporting byMongabayin the same town late last year revealed lax enforcement conditions. A large timber market with little oversight is located in the center of Dong Ky, where traders shared that their supply came from Cambodia and Laos, even though both countries have banned exports to Vietnam.

Such blatant illicit timber trading should give the EU pause before signing its agreement with Vietnam, EIA argues. It will be difficult for the European bloc to verify timber imports when corruption is so rampant along Vietnam’s border.

This isn’t a small industry either, as Vietnam’s wood product exports are now the sixth-largest in the world, estimated to hit US$8 billion this year, up from US$7.3 billion in 2016, according to the report.

<!--[if gte mso 9]>

“Vietnamese
state involvement in multimillion-dollar transnational organized timber crime
simply cannot be accepted by the international community and absolutely must
not be ignored by the EU,”states Wadley.

Mongabayseeks to raise interest in and appreciation of nature and wildlife, while examining the impact of emerging trends in climate, technology, economics, and finance on conservation and development.

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